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Operating Systems Solaris Understanding & Monitoring CPU performance (Load vs SAR) Post 302974938 by javanoob on Monday 6th of June 2016 11:26:33 AM
Old 06-06-2016
Hi Jlliagre,

Thank you so much for your reply. Really appreciate your guidance.

Quote:
Originally Posted by jlliagre
No. The load would be 9+1 during the same 1 second when all processes compete then 0 during 9 seconds when all are idling so the average load would be 1. As you have only one core, the CPU utilization would be 10%.
Please pardon me for my ignorance, but I still did not quite get the full picture or the maths behind this.

Quote:
the load will be 9 (in queue) + 1 running during the 1st second, and 0 during the next 9 seconds.
q1) Does that means that the 10 threads/load are actually completed within the 1st second (right before the 2nd second)

Quote:
so the average load would be 1.
q2) Do you mean that the load average is calculated as an average of 1 second for the past 10 seconds ?
Hence (9+1) =10 load in the past 10 seconds ? (10load/10sec)
so its essentially 1 load / per sec, for the rest of the 60 secs/1 minute ?
--but i thought you mentioned earlier that the load is sample every 10ms and not 10 sec?

Quote:
As you have only one core, the CPU utilization would be 10%
q3) My understanding is that I have 1 cpu/core.
It was utilized 100% on the 1st second of every 10 seconds.
In 1 minute, it would be utilized 5/60 second.
So the utilization for 1 minute is 5/60 * 100 = 8%.

How does it become 10% ?
Because the CPU is fully utilized for 1 sec in every 10 second = 1/10 *100 = 10% ?

Base on the above ->
Is both
a) the cpu utilization (1sec/10sec*100)
and
b) the cpu load ( (9+1)load / 10 sec) calculated per every 10second then ?

======

Please do bear with me if i seems totally off.
Hope to hear your advice soon.

Regards,
Noob

Last edited by javanoob; 06-06-2016 at 12:34 PM..
 

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LOADWATCH(1)						      General Commands Manual						      LOADWATCH(1)

NAME
loadwatch - run a program when machine is idle SYNOPSIS
loadwatch [options] -p pid | [--] prog [args] DESCRIPTION
loadwatch either spawns a child process prog with the arguments args and controls it with all its process group, or takes control of an already running process with pid pid with all its process group. loadwatch allows the controlled processes to run while the load average remains below high_limit. Every delay seconds, loadwatch checks the load average. If the load is above high_limit, the child is suspended; the child is resumed when the load falls below low_limit. OPTIONS
A summary of options is included below. -h high_limit A decimal value that sets the system load at which the child process will be suspended. (Default: 1.25) -l low_limit A decimal value that sets the system load at which the child process will be resumed. (Default: 0.25) -d delay An integral number of seconds that sets how often the system load will be checked. (Default: 10) -n copies An integer value that sets the number of copies of prog to run. (Default: 1) -u file Create a UNIX domain socket file for use by lw-ctl. -p pid The pid of the program that should be controlled by loadwatch (with all its process group). SEE ALSO
lw-ctl(1), nice(1) BUGS
You should choose low_limit and high_limit carefully. When the load drops below low_limit, the process(es) will be resumed, and it should not, by itself, cause the load to raise above high_limit, or the whole will oscillate, periodically suspending and resuming the process(es). Similarly, if several instances of loadwatch are running, they may resume their processes at the same time, leading to oscillations if the limits are not carefully chosen. Hence, each instance of loadwatch affects every other instance on the computer, and should not be consid- ered in isolation. AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Dale E. Martin <dmartin@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). It was then updated by Nicolas Boullis <nboullis@debian.org>. July 2003 LOADWATCH(1)
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